18 June 2014
Last updated at 11:59 ET
Anti-paedophile police fight child porn 'epidemic'
Angus Crawford joins US authorities on a raid on a child pornography suspect
The
internet trade in images that show child sex abuse is now "an
epidemic", according to the head of the global initiative to combat the
problem.
Police officers from around the world serve on the Virtual Global Taskforce.Its chairman, Ian Quinn, tells the BBC there has been an "explosion" in cases handled by US authorities.
The US alone has 61 Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) units, each made up of state, local police and federal agents.
BBC News joined a recent operation in Los Angeles.
Twenty one officers were briefed at dawn in a parking lot in central LA.
Lt Andrea Grossman, from the Los Angeles Police Department, told us they conducted such operations "three to five times per week".
Their target was a man who had tried to send obscene images via his Gmail account.
The team was led by an officer holding a pump-action shotgun, backed up by others with an assault rifle and hand guns.
A suspect was detained.
The man's computer was analysed in a mobile laboratory, housed in a large camper van parked outside the address.
- In 2002 the US National Center for Missing and Exploited Children reviewed and confirmed 45,055 examples of obscene images of children found online (some of these were duplicates)
- In 2013 the figure had grown to 23,881,197
- As of May 2014, the centre had reviewed 112 million files containing images of child sexual abuse
He was charged with possessing illegal material.
Operation Predator The US Department of Homeland Security investigations (HSI) launched more than 4,000 investigations into online child sexual abuse last year.
"Globally there's not a country that can hide from this crime," says Mr Quinn.
To combat the problem department launched Operation Predator in 2003, with three key aims:
- to rescue children
- to prosecute their abusers
- to stop the trade in obscene images
- In 2003, 339 arrests were made worldwide in connection with Operation Predator
- In 2013, the number had grown to 2,099
- To date, the total number of arrests linked to the operation totals 10,608
"Your suspects are our suspects, your victims are our victims," she says.
"I start my day at 04:00, so I can talk to the Brits, the Australians, to any international partner."
Her team also has access to software that can track in real time paedophiles accessing images on peer-to-peer networks.
They taught their UK counterparts advanced techniques for tracking suspects online and gathering evidence.
British arrest The cooperation between the US and UK has led to some high profile arrests.
Earlier this year a British man called Mark Luscombe was jailed after an operation which began in the US.
Luscombe, 29, of Verwood, Dorset, used a paedophile chat room online.
He contacted an undercover agent from Homeland Security who was posing as a man offering his children for sex.
Luscombe was sentenced to five years in jail after pleading guilty to 16 offences at Bournemouth Crown Court.
BBC News has obtained access to his police interview tapes.
In them Luscombe tells officers that he thought he might be under surveillance.
He also admitted that he needed help.
"I've always felt this way, I know it's bad and wrong... it's just wired up."
Detective Superintendent Chris Naughton from Dorset police believes this conviction sends a powerful message.
"From us receiving the information to going through his door was about 48 hours," he says.
"I think that shows how well [international cooperation] works."
Undercover agent Homeland Security regularly deploys undercover officers online.
Special Agent Kevin Laws has been doing the job for a decade and has made 60 arrests.
He poses on incest chat rooms as a father offering his children for sex with other adults.
"This is as bad as it gets," he tells us.
He gets frequent requests from people who want to meet him and abuse the fictitious children, including people from the UK.
"Oh every day, it's a rare time I don't speak to someone in the UK," he says.
He admits that his work is like "a drop of sand in the ocean", but that it does send a clear message to abusers.
"We might not get you today or tomorrow, but we will get you, and it will be when you least expect it."
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